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Alex Marchais, Original Diving intern extraordinaire (he is
French after all) recounts one of the dives of his life, the
Yongala wreck in Australia.

As an instructor it's hard to think of your favourite dives, as
you need to stay focused on your divers rather than what is all
around you. However, a few of them remain special to me, such as
the wreck dive SS Yongala near Townsville, Australia. For wreck diving fans this is a
must dive.

Australia was one of my first adventures abroad with a few
missions that I wanted to complete: to spend my birthday on
Wineglass Bay, Tasmania - tick; to meet Aboriginal Australians -
tick; to dive on
the Great Barrier Reef - I was nearly there…

I booked a three day liveaboard with
the money that I had left which was disappearing faster than a
digestive in a hot mug of tea. Before that day, I had never heard
of the SS Yongala so it was a total shock (in a good way) when I
saw what lay below.

Let's start with the ship itself which sunk in March 1911 when
caught in a storm. A passenger steam ship of 350ft, resting to
starboard, between 52ft - 100ft deep, the Yongala shipwreck lies on
a sandy bottom, making it a perfect artificial reef hosting an
incredible quantity and variety of marine life.

The wreck on its own makes a memorable dive but there is also
the life that has taken over the entire boat during the past
century, including a vast amount of colourful soft corals and
whip corals all over the place bringing the vessel to life as the
ocean moves.

What makes a dive stand out from others is not just what you see
but what you experience, and what I experienced that day was very
special. Here I was spending the entire dive, legs crossed, fins in
my hands, being pushed by a gentle current in the exact direction
that the boat was facing. I was simply controlling my breath to
adjust my depth, looking at the mesmerising picture I was part of,
with Queensland groupers of more than 2m, a few bull sharks, sea
snakes, turtles, eagle rays with babies flying beneath their mums'
wings, school of barracudas and, towards the end of the dive,
dolphins to make it even more memorable. This is wreck diving at
its very best.

The sinking of the SS Yongala was a tragedy. Ironically, the
Aboriginal meaning for Yongala is 'Good Water' which is precisely
where the vessel has come to rest.

Have you had any wreck diving adventures in Australia or
anywhere else for that matter? If so, tell us in the comments. If
you want to visit Australia or any other wreck diving hotspot
please contact
us.

About Alex Marchais

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